IPP

Out of curiosity, I decided to write a little IPP client library in Python. An
in-progress version can be found here.

In less than 500 lines of Python, I have an IPP message
encoder/decoder, and some higher level classes to perform a few
operations on printers and jobs. I’ve been able to successfully talk to
the following IPP servers:

  • CUPS (I’ve also got a little code to perform some of the CUPS
    proprietary operations).

  • an HP LaserJet 5100 and a 2300 — both with JetDirect 615n
    (J6057A) cards.

  • a Lexmark Optra C710.

The following didn’t want to talk to me:

  • an HP LaserJet 4V with a JetDirect 400n (J4100A) card (it seems
    to always give me a client-error-bad-request response).

  • a Canon iR C3200. (incidentally, this printer/copier apparently
    runs an embedded version of SunOS 4.1.4)

I’m probably doing something wrong for these last two, although it
is a bit difficult to work out what.

When talking to CUPS, I can use the proprietary CUPS-Get-Printers
operation to list all the printers it knows about which would make it
pretty easy to provide functionality of something like gnome-print-manager:

>>> import ipplib
>>> cups = ipplib.CUPSServer('ipp://localhost/')
>>> for info in cups.get_printer_info():
... print info['printer-name'], '-', info['printer-uri-supported']
...
harryplotter - ipp://hostname/printers/harryplotter
 ...
>>>

Similarly, it is easy to list the jobs (pending or completed) for a
printer. I still haven’t tried out any of the operations that can
change a printer or job’s status, but in theory that should all work 🙂.

Thoughts on the protocol

While IPP uses HTTP as a transport, there is a fair bit of overlap
between what the two protocols do, such as:

  • request methods/operations and response status codes.
  • identification of the resource the operation is being performed
    on.

  • IPP attributes seem quite similar to HTTP headers.
  • message body mime type declarations
  • compression of message bodies

Other things serve no purpose when tunneled through HTTP, such as
message sequence numbers. Apparently the reason for this is so that IPP
could in the future be sent directly using a custom protocol (in that
case, the sequence numbers would allow for pipelining of requests, and
out of order responses). However, I would be surprised if such a
protocol ever gets developed. IPP will probably continue to use HTTP as
its transport.

This does lead to complications though:

  • The URI you do an HTTP POST to may differ from the URI specified
    inside the IPP message. The spec says that the HTTP level URI should be
    ignored. If you have ever looked at the CUPS log files, you might have
    noticed that it almost always posts to “/” rather than the resource it
    is acting on. To make matters more complex, some of the proprietary CUPS
    operations
    require that you post to a different HTTP URI to the one
    in the IPP message.

  • A request can fail at one of two levels. An IPP client will need
    to detect and handle both HTTP level and IPP level error responses. In
    fact, most IPP error messages will come back as “HTTP/1.1 200 OK”.

Apart from the few warts, IPP seems like a pretty nice protocol. It
is fairly easy to parse (assuming you have an http client library to
use), and is very extensible. A lot nicer than LPR 🙂.

23 February 2004

louie: doesn’t the fact that the introduction of a third credible candidate causes problems is in fact a problem in itself?

There are vote counting schemes in use that don’t penalise similar candidates, such as the single transferable vote system used in Australia to elect MPs. Rather than splitting the vote, the votes for the least popular candidate’s votes get transferred to their second preference. This process gets repeated til there is a candidate with a clear majority. There is something fundamentally wrong with a system where a minor candidate does more harm for their cause than good.

It’s due to similar reasons that I’ve brought up switching to the multiple seat version of STV (which is used for Australian senate elections) for the Gnome Foundation elections.

Guantanamo Bay

It feels really weird to agree with John Howard. There are currently two Australian citizens who have been held at Guantanamo bay for over two years without being charged (one of them wasn’t even in the war zones — he was captured in Pakistan). Apparently the US will only release them to Australia on the condition that they be prosecuted. Unfortunately neither person committed any crime under Australian law as it was at the time.

We now have Mark Latham offering to support the Government if they want to change the new terrorrism laws to allow them to be applied retrospectively to the two. This seems like such a bad idea at so many levels (think about the precedent). It doesn’t look like that will be happenning though, since John Howard rejected the offer.

Maybe the US will get a new sensible president, and the situation will get resolved sensibly. Maybe not.

17 February 2004

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Weather

It has been really hot and humid here for the past few days. While it is not uncommon to have hot weather in Perth, high humidity is quite unusual. It seems to be due to the floods up in the north of the state (they had a report on the news about an 18 person town that had been without a pub for 3 days).

There was a big thunder storm last night, so hopefully things will get back to normal. Unfortunately, it is still quite hot (9:20am at the moment, and its 33°C with 62% relative humidity) and there has been an order preventing people from using air conditioners due to supply problems at the power company.

On another note, if you are using Gnome 2.5.x, the weather applet will now display forecasts for most of the Australian locations, downloaded from BOM. You can also get it to display a radar image by manually entering in the URL in the preferences (the one for Perth is here).

jhbuild

jhbuild now does syntax highlighting of cvs output. In particular, it will display conflicts in red. It also repeats the list of conflicts when the checkout is complete (a useful idea I stole from Mozilla’s client.mk), which is very useful for large modules when you have modified a few files.

To get CVS to output in line buffered mode while passing its output to me, I needed to use a pseudo terminal, at which point I found a few bugs and annoyances in the Python standard library pty.spawn function:

  1. It leaks the pty master fd on each run.
  2. It doesn’t return the exit status of the child.
  3. It doesn’t provide a way to stick the pty connection into non-blocking mode, which is needed if you want to read lines from the child as they are produced.

I reported it as bug 897935, so hopefully it will be fixed in a future version. For now, I have my own private copy of the function.

12 February 2004

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jhbuild

Had a pretty good response to the jhbuild changes. There was a number of problems I didn’t catch during my testing (more that I would have liked). However, I think I caught the last few ones with pychecker.

I suppose the next thing to do is to help the fd.org guys set things up so they can manage their module sets from their own CVS tree. That will make it easier to recommend as a build tool.

It is also almost at a stage where it could be packaged as a tarball to be used for building Gnome developer snapshots. (Jeff has said that this might be easier than updating garnome).

Creative Commons

I was looking around on the creative commons website, and came accross this page. Essentially, O’Reilly is planning on licensing their current books under an effective 14 or 28 year copyright (pending author approval).

In addition to that, they say they are planning on releasing their out of print books under an attribution license straight away (again, pending author approval). I was looking over the list of books on the page, and the out of print list included the X series. I have a couple of books from the series, and they have been quite useful.

It looks like they started this a while back and haven’t gotten very far, but it would be very useful once the rest of the X series is available.

jhbuild

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Checked in a fairly big set of modifications to jhbuild, designed to make it a bit more modular and the code less messy. I had been working on these changes for a while now, and had been keeping track of them on the jhbuild-ng branch.

Here are a few of the main changes:

Code reorganised into a package

The code has been reorganised into a Python package. Unfortunately this means that the old shell script used to start jhbuild won’t work. Rerunning “make install” will fix this though. This will make it easier to extend things in the future.

AMD64 support

If you are running on an AMD64 Linux machine, the libraries jhbuild builds will end up in ${prefix}/lib64, as they should. If you really want your 64-bit libraries to go in ${prefix}/lib still, you can add “use_lib64 = False” in your config file.

The code is set up to try and set use_lib64 correctly for the machine it is running on. If you find a case where use_lib64 is set incorrectly, please file a bug report.

Unattended build with reporting

Based on a suggestion from someone in the audience at Gnome.conf.au, I implemented a new non-interactive mode that redirects all output to a bunch of files in a directory, along with an HTML page giving a summary of how the build went.

An example of the output can be seen here (generated from a run on an Opteron system). This functionality is available through the jhbuild tinderbox command.

It would be nice to get some of the Gnome companies (eg. Sun) to set up some build boxes running something like this on uncommon hardware to help test Gnome builds.

Build environment sanity check

A jhbuild sanitycheck command. This is intended to be used as a way of checking that the build environment is sane. I plan on changing jhbuild bootstrap to be a script intended for installing all the build tools in the build prefix. This way, if you use the build tools provided by your distro, you can simply run sanitycheck to make sure everything is okay and omit bootstrap.

This command should become more useful as I extend it (most likely in response to bug reports).

Load module sets from web servers

Previously, all the build information in jhbuild was maintained with the code in Gnome CVS. This worked pretty well for building Gnome, since people who were able to check code in that would break the build could also fix the build instructions in jhbuild.

Since then jhbuild has become less Gnome specific, and includes rules for building a number of non-Gnome packages including a lot of stuff from freedesktop.org, such as the X server. Having the build rules stored in Gnome CVS isn’t anywhere near as convenient for them, which was the reason for this new feature.

Now it is possible to specify a full URL as the module set in the config file. Jhbuild will then download the module definition file from the web server and use that. There is code to check whether the modules file has changed if the cached copy is too old too (these checks use various HTTP features to keep the bandwidth usage to a minimum). Hopefully this feature will be useful for other large projects looking for a build tool.

I have tested the code a bit, but I wouldn’t be too surprised if one or two bugs have been introduced. If you find a regression, make sure you report it in bugzilla.

It should now be a lot easier to add new features, which is a good thing.